I do recall what this was but not the name of the game or a lot of details on the game (perhaps someone can remember?). Our elementrary school had Apple // computers where they were teaching us programming. As a reward for finishing your assignment they allowed you to play a simple text based game on the computer.

I seem to recall you were prompted to type in the name of an animal or item or something in general (animal I know for sure). It may have been a guessing game. It was very simple but I can recall fun.

However it wasn't long before I figured out how to make use the DIR command and found a file called BRICKOUT on the floppy. I basically discovered that on my own, typed in the name, and before I knew it I was playing my first graphical game. The bad part is that the game had sound and that alerted everyone in the room that I was doing something I should have not been.

Thankfully teachers were more curious of how I discovered that than looking to blame me for not following instructions.

Speaking of elementary school, does anyone remember Wilderness Campaign and Odyssey on the Apple II? Those two games were awesome. They were sort of like a very primitive strategy RPG where you had to raise a small army, rampage through the countryside, and kill the UBG (ultimate bad guy).

What are good sites for finding old game info? I tried moby games and underdogs and couldn't find my mysterious RPG which I think was titled 1882, or 1886 or 1892.. or 1896. Was one of those years I believe. Had these zepplins that were capable of space travel, you could battle other spacecraft and get parts, could board other vessels. Had many famous people in the game. There were classes like engineer, demolitions expert etc...

Speaking of elementary school, does anyone remember Wilderness Campaign and Odyssey on the Apple II? Those two games were awesome. They were sort of like a very primitive strategy RPG where you had to raise a small army, rampage through the countryside, and kill the UBG (ultimate bad guy).

Holy Crap Jimmy! You must be old like me - cause I vaguely remember that game!!!!! I didn't ever actually "play" it - but I remember it. Know what I remember most? The fact that they talked in Old English. "Greetings Sir Lockdownith. Art thou ready to travel to thee mother's home? Lo, many tales have been told signaling that thou wouldst be travelling to yonder isles to saveth the land." I used to love stuff like that! Whenever I hear anyone mention Eamon, I think of Odyssey or Apventure, or whatever. This game and Temple of Apshai stick out in my mind, although I was too young to actually play them I think.

LD

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LD

"Let your enemies fear, for a harlequin of the Laughing God dances at your side."

Ultima I at sleep-away camp. On rainy days they would open the computer room and some kids were playing Ultima. I also remember playing Ultima II the same summer or the next summer, but we were in awe that the little one-screen towns had grown into scrolling larger towns.

It was a TRS-80 Color Computer and the first game, to the best of my memory, was:

QUEST. Here's a screenshot:

The TRS-80 Color Computer:

God, I loved Tandy Hardware, and the Color Computer (CoCo) was one of the best. It used a really nice processor. I remember when my dad worked at Tandy Corp, in the educational software division. I got to play all the games they were thinking of selling on their machines for kids. But my favorite thing was when someone showed me OS/9 on a color computer, with a scsi drive interface plugged in. He had two drives connected, and wanted to copy the data to the other drive, format the first drive, and copy the data back. He executed all three commands within about a minute of each other...the system did all three things in order, chasing itself around the drive platter...it rocked! (quite literally...it was a pair of full height 3 megabyte SCSI drives.) Wow...I think there is still a big CoCo following out there, much like the Amiga user groups. The CoCo ran on a Motorla processor (similar to what powered the early Macintosh systems) so it was pretty powerful for a machine.

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Tom "Dreamshadow" Tjarks Aunt Wu: Care to hear your fortune, handsome? Iroh: At my age there is really only one big surprise left, and I'd just as soon leave it a mystery.

I remember on my 10th birthday my parents bought me a tandy 1000SX and started my life's obsession. MSFS was the game that came with it...I remember to this day booting it up for the first time and sitting there in awe of the new world I had discovered.